Racing – Bicycles Network Australiahttp://www.bicycles.net.au
The Top Australian Cycling PortalMon, 25 Sep 2017 20:27:15 +0000en-UShourly1Getting kids into cycling (Part 2): Giving kids a sporting chancehttp://www.bicycles.net.au/2012/01/getting-kids-into-cycling-part-2-giving-kids-a-sporting-chance/
http://www.bicycles.net.au/2012/01/getting-kids-into-cycling-part-2-giving-kids-a-sporting-chance/#commentsMon, 09 Jan 2012 05:52:58 +0000http://www.bicycles.net.au/?p=3371You can cycle for recreation, you can cycle for fitness, you can cycle for transport and, as Cadel Evans, Anna Meares and Shane Perkins have shown, you can cycle for sport. It wasn’t quite a year ago that I found out that you don’t have to be a super-fit and super-lean athlete to have enormous […]]]>

You can cycle for recreation, you can cycle for fitness, you can cycle for transport and, as Cadel Evans, Anna Meares and Shane Perkins have shown, you can cycle for sport. It wasn’t quite a year ago that I found out that you don’t have to be a super-fit and super-lean athlete to have enormous fun in the sport of cycling – you can read more about that here.

In this coming year at least two of my kids will be getting themselves onto their bikes and into competition, and they’ll be doing that thanks to the junior development program at the Lidcombe-Auburn Cycle Club (LACC) and the influence of Gay Chandler and Ian Watson.

Gay and Ian, both New Zealanders, started their interest in sport cycling through their kids. Ian’s son got into cycling via a team triathlon where he was the cycling member of the three-man team. After their swimmer came out of the water last, Ian’s son jumped on his Dad’s much too large bike and got their team into first position, beating state and national champions in the process. It probably wouldn’t be that surprising, therefore, to find that the lad went on to ride as a professional in Belgium.

Gay’s introduction to cycling was also through her son who wanted to take up cycling as a sport. After a year of carting him around to cycling events, she decided to jump on a bike as well and rode as a masters cyclist at Oceania and National level, picking up a good amount of silverware in the process. Given that they both came to cycling as adults, Ian and Gay have a varied cycling background.

While I don’t have the depth of experience that Ian and Gay have, it should be pretty obvious that I’m already a convert to cycling as a sport. My kids have been watching me ride for almost a year now and they’ve made friends at the race meets, ones who they want to ride against. They know that when they start racing they’ll be riding at the Lidcombe velodrome, and they have no fear of that at all. From a non-cyclist point of view, however, this is about as far from riding on the local shared user path as you can get in cycling; yet many of the kids in our club seem to start there. I asked Gay about the junior development strategy she employs with the kids at LACC.

Gay: “One of the challenges for me in getting young children into cycling, and into bike racing, is getting access to good places to train them; that’s why we started with the track. The thought of getting them out track racing, for some people, can be a little scary; putting their precious little ones onto bikes with no brakes! But if you watch those little kids on their track bikes, they’ve got amazingly good control over their bikes and good skills at quite young ages.”

“I’ve been working with some of the younger kids for about two years and it’s been interesting to watch them develop over that two year period; their bike handling skills are superb. You really can train quite a lot into them as long as you make it fun. We do lots of different challenges and we make up games within the coaching structure so they’re not just out there riding laps and counting laps. There’s all different games, like making trains or slingshot races, and they’ve all got their own names. [The kids] know what those names mean and all of those games teach different strategies; they can sit down and watch a high level race and say “They’re doing a slingshot”, or “They’ve got a train” and that means something to them that wouldn’t mean anything to a professional cyclist, but it’s the exact same thing.”

“It’s interesting when you work with the different psychologies of the different children and you have to coach around those; you have the kids who are the “grinners and winners” who, as they come over the finish line, turn to receive the photo flash, give a nice big smile and take their eyes off what’s happening and where their bikes are going. Then you have the others who, as soon as they see the finish line, just give up because they’re exhausted and then there are others who cross the finish line and immediately swerve in. There’s all these new challenges all the time working with such a young group of kids; I have to come up with different ways of meeting them.”
“[Coaching young kids] is really a trial project. When you come across to cycling at 15 and you have to ride races of 40, 45 or 50kms, most kids will go “I can’t do that” and it will turn them off. Or when they’re up against other kids who have been doing it for years and who can pump out 40 km an hour; it’s a hard sport if you come into it late (although if you come into it as an adult it’s not that bad)”.

Ian: “Our motto is “as soon as they’re out of nappies, they’re on a bike”…otherwise they end up playing soccer.”

But what if you don’t get your kids started early? Does it mean they’ll never do well in cycling?

Gay: “Well, it doesn’t really matter. It just becomes more a matter of building a longer term relationship with them and not winding up their expectations in the first year. If they want to do it and give it a go, within twelve months they can lift themselves up to be there; it’s just a lot harder if they come with low levels of fitness as well as having to learn the skills. It just takes a little longer; it’s generally easier if we can get them younger”.

Both Ian and Gay laugh as they tell me stories of particular kids and their novel racing techniques, such the girl who was mocked when she swam the first leg of a triathlon wearing floaties, but shut everyone up when she got onto the bike and won. Their laughter is good natured and their enjoyment of these experiences is genuine. If that was all there was to this story, then that would certainly be enough: great coaches create a great team; good times were had by all. Obviously, that is not all there is; what makes this story different is the Pixies – Australia’s (and possibly the world’s) only all-girl junior development team.

Gay: “It’s been interesting, working with the girls team particularly, because we really didn’t have girls in the club; we had two or three older girls in the 16’s and 19’s, and we had one under 13 that went to another club because we had no other girls. So we sat down and said “How do we get girls? What are we doing wrong? Why is this sport not appealing to girls?”, because it should appeal to girls.

For us, the key was giving them a team identity: The Pixies. We gave them something that stood out, so that when I took them out [to a race] they wouldn’t merge into the crowd. So rather than [people] seeing our group and saying “Look at that bunch of kids” they’d say “Wow, look how many girls they’ve got” and “Oh, my daughter could ride a bike too” or “I’m already here with my son, I’ve never thought about my daughter”.”

And stand out they do. Lidcombe-Auburn’s regular kit is a black jersey and knicks with a large yellow strip around the body. The Pixies have a similar kit, but with pink instead of yellow. This means they are immediately linked to the other riders in the club, but they’re recognisably different.

According to Ian: “That was the cleverest part of this strategy; you often see men riding their bikes with their sons, but what about his daughter? His attitude is often “Well, she’s just a girl”. But with the Pixies, they have the uniform, they have the bike and all of a sudden you have three in the family riding, and before long even mum is looking at riding as well. If the son doesn’t have a bike [and the daughter does] he’ll want one as well and then you also get the dad.”

Gay agrees: “Men will often buy their sons a bike but not their daughters because they don’t see girls as riders. They’ll invest in their son in the sport but not their daughter” and the Pixies approach seems to be working, “Now we’re in the reverse position where we have more girls than boys [as club juniors]. That’s taken only twelve months. It’s amazing what these girls accomplish with one training session a week and occasional rides on the weekend. They really can learn to race quite quickly.”

So by addressing the gender imbalance in junior racing, Ian and Gay have affected a whole family interest in sport cycling. This is no more obvious than when the Pixies go “on tour” to a track meet.

Gay: “At [a track meet in] Dubbo, almost all of the parents rode in the afternoon after the kids carnival. A lot of the parents had only bought track bikes that year. While they’d ridden road before, they hadn’t ridden track, but now that the kids were involved they wanted to as well. The kids had as much fun cheering for their parents as their parents had cheering for them earlier in the day. It becomes a family event.”
I’ve seen this myself in a criterium I rode in during one of LACC’s off racing weeks. The host club had no junior races scheduled until they were inundated with adult LACC riders with their kids in tow. Our club bought a whole junior race with them! As Gay quipped “That was only a third of our guys. Juniors want kids to ride with.”

The biggest problem junior cycling faces is competition from traditional team sports such as soccer, netball and cricket. Cycling simply isn’t viewed as a valid sporting option next to these sports and so choosing cycling isn’t a simple decision for parents to make.

Gay: “It takes time because we have to make a huge impact at that age and grow it upwards. Once you get this body of girls, and boys, then you have lots of people to race and what makes it more fun is to have someone to to race who’s almost at your level. It doesn’t matter if it’s a boy or a girl, or older or younger, you push against that person and then you both can grow. So it’s a numbers game for us in cycling. We need to have enough numbers to make it interesting for all the kids.”

So the question becomes, how do we get junior development like this in every club? I told Ian and Gay about when I was coaching my kids in under-6s soccer. When I volunteered for that, I had no coaching experience, but Soccer Australia (Football Federation Australia) ran a coaching clinic for all of us beginner coaches where they taught us how to coach little kids and they gave us all a coaching manual. This manual was a masterpiece of instructional design, it made putting together a season’s worth of coaching sessions so easy that anyone could do it. If that wasn’t enough, there were support videos, coaching forums and a coaching pathway if you wanted to progress your skills and knowledge. I know from talking with other parents that cricket and netball have similar schemes. Isn’t there something like this for cycling?

Gay: “Cycling is not like that, not like that at all and it’s the hardest thing that I’m always fighting with. If you look to swimming, swimming has set itself up really well and swim coaches have been paid well for a long time; it’s valued as a skill by parents and so they bring their kids along to swimming and they’re prepared to pay for it, to develop that skill in their children. Cycling hasn’t come down that pathway; coaches are completely undervalued, they’re not paid, most of them are volunteers.”

“I have the coaching skills and credentials to prepare athletes for national titles and Commonwealth games, but that’s not what I’m passionate about; I’m absolutely passionate about juniors. If they have an introduction to the sport and a pathway through the sport and a family experience in the sport their lives are so much richer in the long term.”

“In many sports, and even in cycling, you start with your athletes young and if your athlete progresses then you as a coach progress. I believe that pathway is wrong. I fundamentally believe that every coach at every age should be as good as they can possibly be, that children deserve the right to be coached by a good, qualified coach just as much as any top level athlete does.”

“Good coaches will grow good programs. Unfortunately, coaches are not connected to each other to help each other grow good programs. If you went to any club and said “Would you like a good, rich juniors program?”, they’d say “Of course we do”, but no one is helping them do that. They should be coming to us and saying “What are you doing? How are you doing it? Can you help us do it?” because if they have juniors and a good program, then that helps our juniors because it would mean more numbers and more competition.”

“Get good coaches and you’ll see cycling develop, you’ll see the programs get enriched and grow in number. You’ve got to value your coaches.”

After talking to Ian and Gay in depth, and having seen the results of their work at the Lidcombe-Auburn Cycle Club, it’s obvious that even a couple of passionate people can make a huge difference in their local community and in their sporting club. Imagine if we could find and train these people and replicate what’s happening at LACC. Imagine if we can put these people in contact with local frame builders, importers and bike recyclers and then hook all of these people up with local schools. Imagine cycling as a school sports option. Imagine road races where people sit in their front yards and cheer for the local kids for half an hour on a weekend morning. Imagine petitioning local council for permission to build a mountain bike trail or bmx track on disused land.

Imagine? It is possible, and the first step is to chain Ian and Gay to a desk or video camera and make them document everything they know. If we can get them to train the trainers and if we can get clubs to push the whole family approach to cycling, we would have a grass roots movement that would grow cycling the same way that Soccer Australia, Cricket Australia and Netball Australia have grown their sports. If we can have an Ian or Gay in every club in Australia, what a difference it would make!
If you want to get your kids into cycling as a sport, you’ll need to join a cycling club. Competitive Cycling Clubs in your area can be found through Cycling Australia. You’ll need a license, which for an under 13 is only $20 for a restricted and $66 for an open racing license, a helmet and a bike. Quite often any bike will do to start riding with and your club can help you with choosing and sourcing more suitable bikes as your child progresses. While your there, think abut racing yourself; it’s an experience you won’t forget.

]]>http://www.bicycles.net.au/2012/01/getting-kids-into-cycling-part-2-giving-kids-a-sporting-chance/feed/3Getting On Track: An introduction to Track Cyclinghttp://www.bicycles.net.au/2011/02/getting-on-track-an-introduction-to-track-cycling/
http://www.bicycles.net.au/2011/02/getting-on-track-an-introduction-to-track-cycling/#commentsThu, 24 Feb 2011 21:30:34 +0000http://www.bicycles.net.au/2011/02/getting-on-track-an-introduction-to-track-cycling/The shadow of a rider climbs up the embankment and into the periphery of my vision as I come around the turn into the home straight. I don’t know if the silhouette is mine, thrown there by the overhead lights, or if I’m about to head into the straight with someone on my shoulder. Either way, I’m not slowing down.

There are six people in this race and two of them are in front of me. I need to hold my line and stick to the wheel of the person in front, so I don’t take my eyes off of them. My family is watching behind the barrier to my right, the commissaire and race officials are in the centre of the track and yet I barely notice them. The wind is rushing past me, my heart is beating hard and though it’s cliche, I feel like I’m flying.

I don’t know the guy riding at first wheel, but second wheel is Mel who won every D grade race last week, my first week of racing. I finished second to her in the qualifier earlier tonight and know she is the fastest in this field. The lap board says "1" and the commissaire starts ringing the bell to indicate that we’re starting the last of the 7 lap race. The first wheel kicks up his speed; he’s been pulling us around the track for a lap but he won’t let the lead go without a fight in the bell lap. He looks tired, so Mel and I cover his acceleration. As we enter the first turn we move around him and we’re both past him before we’re into the back straight.

Mel drops down into the sprinters lane and accelerates again. I don’t follow her move this time, instead I put the power on as well and try to draw parallel to her as we enter the final turn. The shadow she is seeing cast on the track is definitely someone on her shoulder, but I’m further up the bank and I have to travel faster to keep up with her. My front wheel is just behind hers as we enter the home straight for the last time in this race. I put my head down, keep the bike straight and pedal like a demon – she does the same. After 3000m of racing, I beat her on the line by less than half a wheel and win my first track race.

D grade races around the outdoor asphalt track at Lidcombe Oval.

Rewind to a few years ago and I, a typical born again cyclist, was watching the Tour de France for the first time, along with my wife. She asked me why I didn’t try a bit of racing, given that I was riding so much now. The idea stuck in the back of my head for a while and I slowly pulled together some good second hand parts to build a road racing bike.

I started checking out the cycling clubs in my area, showing up to their races (usually criteriums) and chatting with the members. While they were all friendly and welcoming to new members, the club I finally decided on (Lidcombe-Auburn Cycle Club) had a great kids development program (with a special forcus on girls cycling; I have three of them), a good calendar of training rides, and a track that they’d been racing at since 1947. That’s what got me in the end – the track.

Criteriums and road races are great, for riders. For the spectators, they get to see the riders pass them only every so often, then all of a sudden the race is over and everyone goes home. Track racing, on the other hand, is a true spectator sport. The whole track is visible from the stands, so you can watch everything that is happening in the race. The races are short, running over a distance of a few kilometres, which is less than a dozen laps. Because the races are short, they’re all action and you get to race multiple times per meeting. To top it off, there is also a great variety of race formats: scratch races where everyone starts together off the same mark, handicaps where they start at different points around the track, point races where there are races within the race, and many other individual and team events. Each race suits different riding styles and they all have their own strategies to master; track racing has been described as "chess on wheels".

The track at Lidcombe Oval was less imposing than I had thought it would be. I had always pictured velodromes as the big Olympic behemoths raced on by skin suited hard men, but many velodromes are shallow banked outdoor asphalt tracks (like our track) or concrete tracks with steeper banking; the big board tracks are quite a rarity by comparison.

My mind was made up and I had the family’s nod of approval, so I signed up for a Cycling Australia licence. This licence allows me to participate in any sanctioned cycle racing event (from BMX to road racing) and provides insurance while I’m doing it. You get the licence through an affiliated club, so the club joining fee is included in the licence fee. I contacted the club and turned up for the track training night the next week.

I had never ridden a track bike before, nor had I ridden with clipless pedals (though I had a set I intend to use on my road racing bike, when it finally gets an outing), so that night was a night of firsts for me. The clipless pedals were less of a problem than I thought they would be, as was the track bike, though that had a steeper learning curve. Track bikes are fixed gear bikes, which means they don’t free wheel. As such, when the wheels are turning so are the pedals and vice versa; you can’t coast. There are also no gears (which is fine since there are no hills to climb on a track) and they have no brakes, which takes a bit of mental adjustment to work through (you slow down by moving up track and by ‘soft’ pedalling).

One of the club’s track bikes. Compare this with?

The author’s commuting bike, which is the same size, manufacturer and approximate age as the track bike

The club officials gave me a detailed safety talk (stressing that I must keep pedalling or bad things will happen), set me up on one of the club bikes and teamed me up with one of their more experienced riders for a few laps on the track. Having an on-track tutor made the whole experience easy and I was soon starting, stopping and flying around the track drafting the other riders.

Race night that Friday saw me in the lowest grade, D grade, in a field of four. The first race was a scratch race and I finished fourth (which was also last) but because the field was small, I qualified for the weekly handicap race. I was on the biggest handicap mark and was told that I should start riding all out from the start until the race was over. Because I was racing against C, B and A graders it didn’t take long before they overtook me, but just riding in a fast field like that was exhilaration enough for me. The third race was a little longer and saw me riding in a pace line, swapping turns at the front and sprinting to the finish. I came third, but that was only because one of the other riders dropped out.

The author getting beaten by a woman 20 years older than him.

Because the night was running early, we finished with an Italian Pursuit race. Two teams of riders from all grades (including junior elite riders) ride against each other with the slowest rider at the front of the team line and the fastest at the back. On the night we had 12 riders in each team, quite a big field. After one lap, the front rider peels off and their race is over. The front rider continues to drop off each lap until it’s down to a one on one sprint. My team won, though I don’t think my "effort" had much to do with it.

Now that I had the experience of racing and I knew how it worked on a basic level, I could focus on improving my performance. Chatting with the other riders, riding on training night, reading about and watching track racing online gave me enough motivation to give it a red-hot go the second time around. In the final race of the night I won.

To put this whole adventure into perspective, I am not an athlete; the last time I won a race was in kindergarten – it was an egg and spoon race and my mum still has the spoon. I’m just a guy who rides his bike to work every day who wanted to take his passion for cycling that one step further. While I don’t know if track cycling is for everyone, it certainly is for anyone, from young kids to the over sixties. Friday night is now family track night for us, at least for the summer. In the winter, I’m told, everyone heads to Dunc Gray Velodrome to race on the Olympic track. My legs are already anticipating it.

If you want to try track cycling, contact your local cycling club and ask where the nearest velodromes are located and who runs them. You should be able to get a day licence to try it out if you don’t already have a racing licence. If you have any interest in cycling as a sport, you should try track riding out at least once. Be warned, however, that it may prove to be addictive.

"That looks easy Dad, I think that I’ll have a go as well"

]]>http://www.bicycles.net.au/2011/02/getting-on-track-an-introduction-to-track-cycling/feed/1AMBC New Course Dates in Vic, ACT, NSW & Qldhttp://www.bicycles.net.au/2009/06/ambc-new-course-dates-in-vic-act-nsw-qld/
Wed, 03 Jun 2009 07:17:57 +0000http://www.bicycles.net.au/2009/06/ambc-new-course-dates-in-vic-act-nsw-qld/The AMBC, Australian Mountain Bike Clinics are a well established company who run MTB clinics for beginners to experts to improve their skills. With the financial crisis, their courses are also now cheaper so this is a fantastic opportunity to tune your skills.

AMBC have a range of different courses on offer such as Trailbreakers which is tailored towards ‘weekend riders’ who already have skills though can improve their technical abilities to become faster and more adventurous. Trail Bunnies is for entry level riders while at the other end is the Fast and Furious is targets towards advanced rides to become faster and improve their racing performance. Chix at Speed is for women only who are confident on trails and who wish to improve their technical skills and speed.

The next block of course from June to early August are now open for registration and prices range between $120 and $150 depending on the type of clinic. The courses run in Victoria, ACT, New South Wales and Queensland.

You can see course dates, locations and costs as well as book online: www.ambc.com.au

]]>2XU initiate training competitionhttp://www.bicycles.net.au/2009/05/2xu-initiate-training-competition/
Mon, 04 May 2009 19:18:58 +0000http://www.bicycles.net.au/2009/05/2xu-initiate-training-competition/The task is simple, rack up as many kilometres as you can on the bike between June 4th to July 4th. The rider with the most KM’s – coinciding with the beginning of the Tour de France will win a host of goodies from clothing gift certificates to bike servicing, Tour DVDs and magazine subscriptions.

To participate, cyclists need to register on location at the 4th of July in Melbourne at the ""2XU Performance Centre" (243 Burwood Rd, Hawthorn Vic 3122). Cycle computers will be zeroed, a sportsmans oath signed and then participants are ready to try and win the jackpot.

At the launch, David McKenzie (SBS Tour de France report) is the guest speaker.

Registration in advance via email:cyclecomp@2xu.com

Competition Website:www.2xu.com/cyclecomp

]]>Your Team, Our Team, Team Jaggadhttp://www.bicycles.net.au/2009/02/your-team-our-team-team-jaggad/
Tue, 24 Feb 2009 08:38:10 +0000http://www.bicycles.net.au/2009/02/your-team-our-team-team-jaggad/Are you little overweight? A bit slow in the bunch? Jaggad still want you to be part of Team Jaggad. It is not a ticket to Pro Cycling Tour events, rather, this clever new idea is a goal orientated program that has participants striving to achieve.

The cyclewear company Jaggad already invests in athletes with sponsorship programs and development groups, the latest concept however invites all cyclists (and triathletes) to participate. For a registration fee of $100 (or $200 for the ‘plus’ program) a member gets a team kit (to the value of $200 or $500 depending on the program) plus 10% clothing discount off online purchases. While this is good news for Jaggad, participants get additional benefits in the form of Jaggad Dollars when they achieve their personal training or competive goals. The Jaggad Dollars can be used to purchase more Jaggad gear.

In a traditional sense, the team is more of a club with the concept being rolled out for Australia and the US. Participation in events as a team however is possible, a team of four ‘Jaggad’ cyclists recently participated in the Token 12 hour (Sydney) in January. To further encourage the sense of unity, the company website will also feature athletes and profiles, information about goals and current achievements, plus will encourage communication between fellow participants and feedback and advice from experts.

Team Jaggad is in the early stages however is well thought-through idea. Not only does it have potential to attract new customers and increase sales for Jaggad, on the flip-side, participants (Team Jaggad members) also gain with tangible benefits as well as the psychological advantages of goal orientation.